Well, while this may be true for some women, several women have expressed different opinions on this.

It is no wonder that many men are going around looking for how to enlarge their penises, some doing things that are so dangerous it leaves them permanently damaged.

This is not to say that a large, thick and long penis – to an extent.

Anyway, here are 5 things that women think about your penis:

1. Super large penises scare women. A large number of women find those extra-huge penises rather daunting. It may fill up more, but also ends up giving more pain than pleasure. It may take a while for the vagina to get accustomed to such and may have caused tears.

2. Skills with using the penis beats penis size in women’s reckoning. Your penis is only as useful as you can manoeuvre it. Some men will have huge tools but only know how to get in and out while a person with a less obvious one knows angle of penetration, sex positions and how to ensure that the sensitive vagina wall linings get the feel.

3. Stamina is key. No matter the size, shape or taste of your penis, you really do need to have stamina to be useful to any woman. So women will not appreciate a anaconda penis on a guy that ejaculates every second or pants after 30 seconds of thrusting. This why you need a good heart and fit limbs.

4. Thickness, rather than length, is more preferable for many women. A stocky penis that is thick or fat gives pleasure as it stretches the vagina around the entrance. A penis too long may even injure the womb (not proven). Maybe that is why some women like midgets.

5. What you do before and after using the penis matters a lot. The average woman likes a man that can arouse them before using the penis. So, your foreplay skills as a man matter a lot than the sex sometimes. Also, how you behave post-ejaculation is important. Do you get up or cuddle a while?

In conclusion, it is important for men – especially those with ‘small’ penises – to know that they need to work on their bedroom skills more than they worry about the size of their ‘work-tool.’